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Rockwall Slope Erosion in the Northwestern Himalaya

Elizabeth N. Orr, Lewis A. Owen, Sourav Saha, Sarah J. Hammer, Marc W. Caffee

2020Journal of Geophysical Research Earth Surface15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Rockwall slope erosion is an important component of alpine landscape evolution, yet the role of climate and tectonics in driving this erosion remains unclear. We define the distribution and magnitude of periglacial rockwall slope erosion across 12 catchments in Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir in the Himalaya of northern India using cosmogenic 10 Be concentrations in sediment from medial moraines. Beryllium‐10 concentrations range from 0.5 ± 0.04 × 10 4 to 260.0 ± 12.5 × 10 4 at/g SiO 2 , which yield erosion rates between 7.6 ± 1.0 and 0.02 ± 0.004 mm/a. Between ∼0.02 and ∼8 m of rockwall slope erosion would be possible in this setting across a single millennium, and >2 km when extrapolated for the Quaternary period. This erosion affects catchment sediment flux and glacier dynamics, and helps to establish the pace of topographic change at the headwaters of catchments. We combine rockwall erosion records from the Himalaya of Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, and Uttarakhand in India and Baltistan in Pakistan to create a regional erosion data set. Rockwall slope erosion rates progressively decrease with distance north from the Main Central Thrust and into the interior of the orogen. The distribution and magnitude of this erosion is most closely associated with records of Himalayan denudation and rock uplift, where the highest rates of change are recorded in the Greater Himalaya sequences. This suggests that tectonically driven uplift, rather than climate, is a first order control on patterns of rockwall slope erosion in the northwestern Himalaya. Precipitation and temperature would therefore come as secondary controls.

Topics & Concepts

DenudationErosionGeologyGlacierQuaternaryPhysical geographySedimentGeomorphologyTectonicsClimate changeHydrology (agriculture)PaleontologyGeographyOceanographyGeotechnical engineeringGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchLandslides and related hazardsGeological formations and processes
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